[[quoteright:300:[[PansLabyrinth http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pans-labyrinth-mess-3.jpg]]]]
[[caption-width-right:300:It was a rough night, [[SheCleansUpNicely but she'll be fine]].]]

->''"A thing of beauty is a joy forever: its loveliness increases; it will never pass into nothingness."''
-->-- '''Creator/JohnKeats'''

Women and girls are action and adventure heroes nowadays, just like men and boys are. They get into dangerous situations, face menacing villains, get captured, and even get into fights.

But even when they're portrayed as equally able to get into danger, something is a little different for the girls. While guys get their clothes messed up a lot or torn, girls tend not to (unless it's [[FanService that kind]] of ClothingDamage). Guys show visible bruises and cuts from their fights, but girls don't suffer these things. Heck, girls don't even get their hair disheveled most times! It's as if nature itself WouldntHitAGirl, not to mention there's often a DirtForcefield (perhaps affected by being {{Stripperific}}--[[UnfortunateImplications chew on that one for a moment]]).

Likewise, girls are almost ''never'' used in slapstick comedy (but she can get a PieInTheFace). They never become TheChewToy. This is less common with independent artwork actually created by women, who apparently don't have hang-ups about hitting a girl (for obvious reasons), but don't expect to see too many women suffering AmusingInjuries on TV or in much of anything published.

Possibly this is because girls are supposed to be beautiful, and the actual [[ScarsAreForever scars that an adventure would realistically bring]] tend to detract from their beauty. Fierce hand-to-hand fights are cool, [[CatFight even sexy,]] but the broken noses and black eyes they cause are not. Since MostWritersAreMale, they only want to see males getting hurt, whether humorously or through exciting action sequences.

This version of the trope may be less common nowadays, possibly because more people, of both genders, want a "cool" ActionGirl who proves she can handle tough situations by showing the scars for having done so, and because mild scars don't necessarily detract from beauty in everyone's opinion. Plus, having one's hair disheveled, your clothes all scuffed up and your face drenched in 2 liters of sweat, blood and grime can be cute to some people, in a [[OutdoorsyGal tomboy-ish way]] (or [[RuleThirtySix more than that...]]). Or there's a fire situation, which can GiveAWholeNewMeaning to "ash blonde".

Still a heroine will (almost) never suffer a ''[[ScarsAreForever permanent]]'' injury such as the loss of a limb or eye, no matter how much punishment she goes through. It's fairly rare for heroes too, but much, much, much rarer for heroines. In the case of heroes, they usually go from BeautyToBeast. Several variations of this include SheFu and WaifFu.

The other version of this trope concerns a different form of beauty: inner beauty. Guys fart, burp, etc.; but girls aren't shown doing it anywhere near as often. Gross-out jokes tend to always involve guys, not girls. After all, girls are never gross, don't you know? And, since MostWritersAreMale, they tend not to want them to be gross.

Could be seen as a form of PositiveDiscrimination in some cases. After all, a female character suffering serious injury or even dying ''will'' attract [[DoubleStandard accusations of misogyny]], {{Chickification}} or StuffedIntoTheFridge...

This is more common in the West, particularly in older movies and shows, but the ''outer'' beauty version is much less common in Japan, where both genders can be equally roughed up or exposed to violence... on the other hand, the ''inner'' beauty version is, if anything, several times worse. Also, this is more common in visual media, where the women are expected to be cute or beautiful, than in books, where it doesn't really matter what the character "looks" like, since you can't see her. Finally, this may not protect an evil or annoying character from [[CoveredInGunge Gunge]], and female villains may also acquire [[GoodScarsEvilScars appropriate scarring]]. (However, giving a FemmeFatale a [[ScarsAreForever permanent scar]] is [[UnstoppableRage generally not a good idea]].)

Male examples of this trope are rare, but more common in works targeted to a female or [[FanYay gay male]] audience where the male characters are hoped to remain [[RuleOfSexy attractive]].

If a girl regularly averts this and it’s PlayedForLaughs she is probably a case of SlapstickKnowsNoGender.

Compare DirtForcefield, KickingAssInAllHerFinery. Contrast UnkemptBeauty. For the clothing only, see BulletProofFashionPlate. If beauty ''is'' tarnished and then subsequently killed off, it's DeathByDisfigurement.

----
!!Examples of the first (action oriented) kind:
'''NO AVERSIONS, unless its a really extreme case, not tragic and/or played for comedy.'''

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
* In ''{{Hitohira}}'' [[spoiler:Nono and Risaki]] start a brutal fight which leaves them both unconscious, but it apparently doesn't leave any bruises.
* ''TenjhoTenge'' tends to go both ways on this. In both the anime and the manga, women are engaged in battle just as much as, if not more than, men. However, in the animated version, the effects of combat towards the girls tend to be limited to ClothingDamage or injuries which don't obscure beauty, like bruises away from the face or sprained limbs. The manga however, which is a great deal more violent, has many female characters face ''terrible and permanent'' disfigurement for their lifestyle choices (such as crushed faces, severed limbs, eyes stabbed, and other wonderful things). However, the main female cast, like Maya and Aya, tend to not face such consequences. Although, since they are legendary fighters, it could just be their skill. Maya is also [[spoiler:nearly beaten to death by Kagiroi]].
* ''Manga/AirGear'' mostly plays this straight, although there are a few exceptions. The biggest would probably have to be [[spoiler:[[StatuesqueStunner Benkei]]]], who hacks her own right leg off to get out of a trap. It doesn't grow back or get replaced.
* None of the girls in ''LoveHina'' suffered as much physical abuse as [[ChewToy Keitaro]].
** In large part this is because they're the ones ''inflicting'' the physical abuse. Naru and Kaolla are the most frequent offenders.
* Balsa from ''SeireiNoMoribito'' receives some serious injuries during the series, but none of them leave visible scars. We can assume she ''must'' have a nasty one on her stomach, but her clothes are rather modest and only show her arms and face, which remain untarnished.
* Every single one of HayaoMiyazaki's heroines, except for the one point (''if'' it occurs) in each movie where they get a little bit dirty or stained on purpose to show they're not afraid to do it, e.g. [[PrincessMononoke San]] cleaning the blood out of one of her "brother"s musket-shot wounds, or [[NausicaaOfTheValleyOfTheWind Nausicaa's]] dress being stained with Ohm blood (which is actually a key plot point). Sorta like their skin and clothes are made out of teflon. (How else do you explain San's gear being clear of blood stains not much later, when even modern soap powder has difficulty getting it all out?)
* In ''{{Ranma}}'' the male characters take way more abuse than the female characters. Except for female Ranma but she's mentally male.
** Most of Rumiko Takahashi works has elements of this.
* Played straight in the first season of ''MagicalGirlLyricalNanoha'', where Nanoha and Fate gets ClothingDamage at best while Chrono is shown with his face half covered in blood.
* In ''{{Change 123}}'' the female fighters get badly injured, but few scars mar their perfect features. The one time they were shown/drawn was when Gettou explained [[JustifiedTrope how hers were closed up so they'd heal and fade]].
* Debatable as to whether this is played straight or averted in ''LightNovel/{{Baccano}}!''. Nice Holystone is hideously scarred and missing an eye due to an occupational mishap (bomb-making). Her best friend goes so far as to have his face tattooed in a similar pattern, in an effort to prevent her from feeling self-conscious about her apparent deformity. That said, being a cartoon, she's adorable and the scars just come off looking cool.
* Zig-zagged in the character of Balalaika in ''BlackLagoon''. The parts of her face that aren't horribly scarred are beautiful. The parts that are scarred look like she's been deep fat fried, hence why some people call her "Fry-Face" (but only to her back).
** When Revy and Roberta have their NoHoldsBarredBeatdown at the end of Roberta's first arc, they are bruised and bloodied, but suffer no permanent damage
* In ''Manga/{{Uzumaki}}'', protagonist Kirie suffers burns that are serious enough to put her in hospital for some time, yet manage to mostly miss her face. Once she leaves the hospital, the ones on her legs are also fully healed without a trace of scarring.
* Nami from ''Manga/OnePiece'' has flawless skin, despite being injured a lot (though not to the extent of Luffy or Zoro). In fact, everyone but Zoro [[spoiler:and Luffy]] doesn't retain any scars from their battles.
* Averted in ''{{Claymore}}''. Even the pretty fighters (which is pretty much all of them) at one point or the other get their limbs hacked off, slashed in the chest and face, ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice, and for the very unlucky ones unable to regenerate, severed into pieces. In the past, Claire's mentor was decapitated by Priscilla, whose awakened form caused the death of all the Claymores accompanying her.
* Pretty much averted in ''MichikoToHatchin'', where the eponymous ActionGirl often gets bruises and black eyes from fighting.
* Averted in the IkkiTousen manga. Every time the {{Action Girl}}s get into major fights, it's a sure thing that either one or more of the ladies will not just get ClothingDamage by the wazoo, but she/they will get beaten bloody, [[VomitIndiscretionShot vomit on-screen]], or [[BringMyBrownPants wet herself/themselves]]. And at least one of them has been permanently mutilated ([[spoiler: Manga!Ten'i, who lost an arm]]).
* In the first scene of the ''Anime/BlackRockShooter'' OVA, Black★Rock Shooter gets impaled by Black★Gold Saw. [[ScarsAreForever She keeps the scar.]] This counts as an aversion because this is the only time in the OVA that someone gets hit with a weapon that could cause such an injury.
** Again happens in 2012 anime. Mato [[spoiler:in Black★Rock Shooter fights Insane Black★Rock Shooter and loses miserably with a bloodied nose, black and blue eye, and a twisted leg]]. An aversion as even though there are many crippling injuries and hacked limbs in the course of the show, Mato is the only one who has a persistent wound that doesn't heal in the duration of her fight [[spoiler:as she's a human and not an Otherself, thus not tailor-made to receive such punishments.]]
* Played relatively straight in {{Sekirei}}, with tons of ClothingDamage and minor injuries that never scar. [[BandageBabe Haihane]] is notable as the only Sekirei with visible scarring, but this may be justified since it's suggested they have better-than-human healing and access to incredibly advanced medical technology. [[spoiler: Karasuba notes that MBI's treatments are so advanced, the near-fatal injuries she received from Miya's RoaringRampageOfRevenge left only a small scar.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fan Fiction]]
* Male example: While earlier fics kept him pretty even through abuse, the Website/ThatGuyWithTheGlasses KinkMeme has been averting this with a vengeance for WebVideo/TheNostalgiaCritic lately. He's been mutilated, snuffed, cut up, had his eyes gouged out, beaten while gangraped, bitten clean through his tongue when he was beheaded in public... you name whatever torture, it's been done to the poor guy.
* [[FanFic/UltimateSpiderWoman Mary Jane Watson]] has been smashed into walls, zapped with electrical bolts, slashed by razor bats, burned with flame, and been punched square in the face, but she's never suffered any permanent scars or blemishes. Her injuries tend to heal rather quickly by themselves once she gets some rest, although she [[CutHimselfShaving still sometimes has to explain how she got hurt in the first place.]] She typically claims that she was caught up in a supervillain attack, which is more plausible than you might think because of how many supervillains are causing mayhem in New York at any given time.
* Averted with [[spoiler: [[TheVamp Cisca's]]]] death in ''[[FanFic/BrutalSeries The Brutal Series]]''. [[spoiler: She nearly has her scalp cut off, [[{{Fingore}} has her nails pulled off one by one, has her fingers cut off at all joints]], [[EyeScream has her eyes gouged out]] and has all her teeth punched out (disfiguring her jaw in the process) before FINALLY being killed from having her heart stepped on. The end result is described as not being recognisable as her face.]]
* Brilliantly averted in [[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/8514012/1/Keena-the-Defendants-of-Constan-Magic-Academy Keena & the Defendants of Constan Academy]], as pretty much anyone can get hurt, most notably chapter 5 with Keena [[spoiler: literally breaking the bones in Samantha's arm.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* Many female {{Superhero}}es tend to benefit from this trope, to the point where it is the Second-Most Common Super Power, [[MostCommonSuperPower beyond the first, of course.]]
** It works that way for men as well. Many superheroes get thrown through walls, blasted, and slammed with few signs of damage and it is rare that any male heroes recieve permenant scars from the ordeals. While it may make sense for guys with superhuman durability and healing factors to remain unchanged, BadassNormal characters like {{Batman}} or DareDevil should be quite ugly by now. Instead, they remain as handsome as ever. It was directly {{Lampshaded}} as far back as the 1960s by {{Spider-Man}}, who noted that the bruises he'd suffered in several fights tended to heal very quickly.
* In fact, if a super-hero ''is'' visibly injured, it likely means this is a ''very'' serious fight that's going to have dire repercussions at the end.
* It's also notable that men are far more likely than women to have powers that leave them hideously deformed. The Comicbook/{{X-Men}} spin-off GenerationX notably featured a team of three girls (all extremely attractive) and three boys -- two of whom had powers that left them physically deformed. Which didn't stop them being considered attractive by many readers, of course -- but when the series' primary MrFanservice has ''no lower jaw'' (when he took his mask off), while his girlfriend is a generic all-American blonde it smells a little like a double standard.
** Seen in earlier X-Men teams, too, where the physical mutations seemed to pop up only in male characters-- Beast and Nightcrawler are visibly abnormal, Angel has hard-to-hide wings, Wolverine had claws. The only female X-Men character of that period who had a visible mutation was Polaris, with easily-dyed green hair (technically, Storm's white hair and blue eyes are physical aspects of her mutation, but they only add to her exotic beauty). Even today, the X-Men have not had a female member who wasn't at least a CuteMonsterGirl.
* While [[Comicbook/IncredibleHulk Bruce Banner]] gets grotesquely muscular and [[ClothingDamage rips his shirt]], depending on the artist, his [[SheHulk female counterpart]] merely gets two feet taller and turns green, or bulks up some, but nowhere near as much as Bruce.
** Averted by the female versions of the Abomination, Abominatrix and Aberration, who mutate exactly like Abomination.
* Aversion with Barbara Gordon: She got shot in the gut... and the bullet pierced her spine and forced her to live a few years in a wheel chair (she's still pretty, though). Also, [[ComicBook/{{Batgirl 2000}} Batgirl]] III, Cassandra Cain, is shown as having plenty of scars and bruises. One scene shows her strolling into a kitchen to get milk... NAKED... but all covered in scars.
* Recently averted by the RedSkull's daughter Sin. Let's just say it's clear she's taking her father's mantle.
* A RareMaleExample is ''HeathenCity Maranatha'', a [[HoYay homoerotic]] [[FilmNoir noir]] action thriller with its share of violence. Despite all the thrashing the characters go through, Owen and Malloy never tarnish their good looks.
* Averted by Sharon Ventura, aka She-Thing, from the ''ComicBook/FantasticFour'', since part of her whole story was the tragedy of The Thing's mutation happening to a woman.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film]]
* Nothing ever mars [[Franchise/StarWars Princess Leia's]] beauty no matter what happens to her - captured, tortured, broken out in a shoddy rescue attempt (let's be serious, it was rather unprofessional) and to top it off, dumped in a garbage bin - she still looked great after it all. And ''that'' was just the ''first'' movie.
** Of particular note was ''her hair''. Almost all of her hairstyles would be difficult - if not impossible - for a hairstylist to even ''create'', to say nothing of keeping them in place after all she goes through. Ironically, the most realistic one was the style she had in ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'' while [[GoGoEnslavement Jabba's prisoner]]. (And in that case, ''the rest'' of the outfit was very unrealistic.)
** Padme is the same in the prequels, but at least in her case her clothing usually seems to have been made with combat in mind in such situations.
* Particularly noticeable in movies from the 1950s and so (at least, those rare movies where women ventured out). See ''TheLeechWoman'' on ''MST3K'', whose leading lady romps through the jungle in a white blouse -- and it stays white the whole time! Ajax, strong on dirt?
* ''{{Grindhouse}}: Planet Terror'', in which RoseMcGowan gets her leg chopped off, to be [[RuleOfCool replaced by an assault rifle with an under slung grenade launcher]].
** However, one will notice that all of the major female characters survive the film, with the [[BrainFood notable exception of Fergie's character]]. [[HerHeartWillGoOn Very few dudes make it out alive]].
* In ''[[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Space Jam]]'', Lola Bunny is the only main cartoon character that never suffers a pratfall, or, indeed, any kind of indignity. Other characters even deliberately take hits intended for her.
* Used in ''Film/ShaunOfTheDead''. No one, except for Shaun, get really bloody and dirty until the end. Even then, Liz is still better off than Shaun.
-->"You've got some red on you."
* ''{{Untraceable}}''. The male victims suffer agonisingly slow deaths with obvious and continuous physical damage (ie. one victim is submerged up to his neck in a tank slowly of sulfuric acid). The heroine's suspended over a DeathTrap that will either kill her instantly or let her escape without a scratch.
* In ''[[Film/TheBourneSeries The Bourne Ultimatum]]'', a GiantMook punches Nicky in the face, knocking her unconscious without otherwise injuring her or marking her in any way.
* Actually averted of all things, in the Kenan and Kel movie ''GoodBurger''. A girl working for the rival burger firm tries to get close to Ed to worm the secret sauce recipe out of him but ends up getting completely battered and bruised on a miniature golf date with him. In the next scene she's covered in bandages and on crutches.
* Averted in ''Film/HouseOfWax2005''. Carly (Elisha Cuthbert) gets her lips glued together and must prise them apart, leaving them bloody for the rest of the film.
** She also gets the tip of her finger cut off. Even Paris Hilton averts this as the killer stabs her in the heel before throwing a pole through her head.
* ''Film/TheFinal'' both plays straight and averts the trope. Two female bullies get chemicals smeared all over their face to destroy their good looks forever, and one gets two of her fingers cut off. However far more male bullies are tortured than females despite there being a well developed female bully who never gets tortured. Also, Emily is [[spoiler: shot in the head]] but this isn't shown.
* Both used and averted in ''Film/{{Serenity}}'', where the female crew gets banged up pretty badly, though mostly in areas away from their faces, with a few aversions.
** River bears a quite visible cut across the top of her forehead in the final scene from her battle against the Reavers.
** Inara gets attacked and ''bitten in the '''face''''' by a Reaver, right after Kaylee is shot by the darts, and right before Zoe gives the order to fall back, [[http://leavemethewhite.com/caps/displayimage.php?album=73&pos=2414 as seen]] [[http://leavemethewhite.com/caps/displayimage.php?album=73&pos=2415 here]].
** Zoe's face remains untouched, but her back receives a horrible slash that will probably become a rather unattractive scar, even with Simon's medical skills.
** Kaylee however, is incapacitated by a series of poison darts, leaving her skin and face untouched.
** Interestingly this applies to the male characters as well. None of them ever get their face permanently damaged. Presumably "because they're so very pretty."
* In ''Film/TempleOfDoom'', the heroine's clothes never tore or got stained.
* In ''Film/CasinoRoyale'' the heroine's mascara ''does'' run when she sits crying in the shower, but oddly is not at all affected when she [[spoiler:drowns]].
** While we're in ''Film/JamesBond'', 007 himself is a masculine example of this trope. It's hard to remember movies where he ends up looking terrible (only three come to mind: ''Film/DrNo, Film/LicenceToKill'' and ''Film/CasinoRoyale'' - his first movie, and two DarkerAndEdgier approaches; there's [[http://www.agonybooth.com/recaps/Die_Another_Day_2002.aspx?Page=2 also]] ''Film/DieAnotherDay'', but that's only the film's beginning, and after months of captivity).
** In ''Casino'' follow-up ''Film/QuantumOfSolace'' Bond looks, as M says it, "like hell" within 15 minutes. It doesn't really ease up from there.
* Averted, but still present in the live-action ''Film/{{Casper}}'' movie, which, for the record, was scripted by two women. Kat is exempt from the wackier slapstick stunts, being locked in a closet while her father battles the Ghostly Trio. Also, the Up-And-At-'Em Machine seems to have more exaggerated effects on the villains than her, in fact seeming to effect only the ''male'' villain. However, the villainess doesn't seem to be quite as exempt from physical comedy as Kat and additionally the local AlphaBitch gets a slapsticky comeupence.
* Films of Film/TheThreeStooges had a rare exception to their usual standard of not actually hitting a woman. A short featured the Stooges as cavemen courting. Moe and Larry have their mates subdued in stereotypical clubbed-hard style. Shemp's beloved had to bash ''him''. The rival tribe comes along, sees the Stooges hauling the women away, and hurls spears at them, sticking in the usual rear slapstick target. Since Shemp is the one being dragged, though, it's the woman who's hit.
* From ''Film/TheLordOfTheRings'', Frodo loses a finger, Boromir catches several arrows in his chest, Aragorn spends the whole trilogy bloody, bruised and scraped. Practically all of the cast is harassed by either the Watcher in the Water or a Cave troll. And all pretty boy Legolas gets over the course of is a bruise and a little smudge of dirt. And Eowyn made it through almost the entire Battle of the Pellenor Fields unscathed, with never a cut or a bruise until the Witch-King smashes her shield with his gigantic mace
** Even Arwen gets a cut across her cheek when she's running from the Nazgul.
* ''Film/{{Jumanji}}'' has Peter getting turned into a monkey and Alan getting all dirty but despite being involved in the same actions, Sarah and Judy don't look that bad. Judy does [[spoiler: get shot in the neck with a barb from a poisonous plant]] but the wound isn't shown on camera much.
* Sci-Fi horror movies, such as ''{{Yeti}}''. Members of both genders survive a horrific plane crash and a battle with a crazy ass monster trying to off them all. Perfect hair.
* In ''GangsOfNewYork'' (2002), the only punishment inflicted on Amsterdam Vallon (played by pretty-boy actor LeonardoDiCaprio) for his attempted assassination of Bill "The Butcher" is a mild scar on his cheek. This is from a man who '''cut out his own eye for flinching!'''
** When they get to the final battle, this is completely thrown out the window. After one explosion, he's covered in dust, and his hair gets blown out of its pretty little bun, for God's sake. Not to mention that when he [[spoiler: kills Bill]], he gets blood ''all over himself''. There's also the [[spoiler: limp he receives from Bill after being slashed across the back of the knee. It didn't look like it was going to clear up.]]
** Jenny Everdeanne. She has scars, but placed where almost no one can see them.
* In ''Film/{{Spider-Man}} 2'' Rosie still looks pretty good for someone who was killed by a hundred shards of flying glass, including at least one to the face/eye.
* ''[[TransformersFilmSeries Transformers]]'' doesn't go too overboard on this with Megan Fox, but it is really glaring in reference to the robots. The ProductPlacement for GM vehicles apparently mandates that all of the Autobots' car modes must be sparkling clean at all times.
** ''RevengeOfTheFallen'' plays this trope noticeably straight. Megan Fox looks as though her (rather overdone) makeup was being touched up every 30 seconds. This is particularly jarring in the final battle, when every other (human) character is covered in filth and blood, Fox still looks perfectly clean and her make up is totally untouched after both her and the main lead get poorly teleported to the other side of the world, run several miles through the hot desert, have several explosions happen basically on top of them, and get thrown into the sand. The main lead is bleeding, grimy, and filthy while she just has her hair a bit rumpled.
** And then in the third, after being thrown through a building, running through an apocalyptic battleground, the lead and the soldiers with them are suitably beaten up, ''Carly's hair and white jacket aren't even ruffled.''
* Spoofed in ''Film/LastActionHero'', where all Jack Slater needs to clean up after emerging from a tar pit is a few seconds with a towel.
* In the film of ''Film/VForVendetta'', Evie's appearance doesn't suffer at all after a prolonged period of imprisonment and torture. It can even be argued that having her hair shaved down to stubble just makes her look even more doe-eyed and delicate. This is in stark contrast to the comic, where she looks like a mummy afterwards.
* In ''BookOfEli'' the world has become a complete wasteland with very limited resources but, hey MilaKunis looks nice. This is justified in that her and her mother were being pampered by the BigBad, receiving rare bottles of shampoo and perfume.
* In ''SinCity'', there is a scene where Dwight (Clive Owen) and Miho (Devon Aoki) both plunge into a tar pit, coating themselves entirely in black tar. Miho is naked when she jumps into the tar, although it's hard to tell (the comic is more explicit in this detail) but she should at least have tar stuck to her skin. Dwight is similarly clean and he actually fell into the tar while fully clothed. Miho also had blood splashed all over her face in an earlier scene, which also got cleaned up inexplicably very quickly. Oh and the men get bruised up and battered a lot, showing scars, cuts, and blood all over in this movie. Some women do die, but it is normally clean gunshot and there is not near as much dirt on them.
** The movie also features a very disturbing aversion. Carla Gugino's character gets her hand severed, and they even show the awkwardly stitched stump.
* While the Bride suffers plenty of beat downs in ''KillBill'' and is frequently seen bloodied and bruised, none of her injuries or ordeals leave any lasting visible damage or scars.
** Sofie Fatale on the other hand ...
* ''DragonWars'' has the heroes' car blasted by a dragon's fireball, flip a few times in the air and skid along the ground, only to have the woman emerge (white sweater included) completely unscathed. Of course, there was a little bit of black soot on her face.
* In ''TheLegendOfZorro'', Catherine Zeta-Jones runs across a dirt field at full speed, fights with a shovel, runs back across the same field at full speed, falls in the dirt at least once, and when she gets back to her room her white nightgown is spotless and she doesn't have a hair out of place.
* The trope is in full force in {{Predators}}. All the male characters are filthy and battle damaged by the end of the film (or at least, the end of their participation in it). The lone female? Barely covered in a light, even film of dirt, not any hint of actual damage. The one bit of damage she's seen to take is suitably out of the way that it doesn't have to get filmed in subsequent shots.
* Averted by Yanin 'Jeeja' Vismistananda in the Muay Thai movies ''Film/{{Chocolate}}'' and ''RagingPhoenix''. Not only do her characters get just as beaten up as the guys on the cast, but ''the actress does as well''; many of the injuries shown in the movie are legit ones suffered during filming. [[http://img.affenheimtheater.de/poster_raging_phoenix.jpg She's still hot as hell, mind]].
* In ''StreetsOfFire'', [=McCoy=] and Ellen Aim aren't hurt at all by the gang, while the men get the snot beat out of them.
* HeroicTrio, a Hong Kong movie featuring three beautiful superheroines, lampshades this at one point. The characters narrowly avoid getting blown up. One of the characters turns to the other and quickly asks, "Am I still pretty?". At most, they get bloodied mouths and dirt smeared on their faces, so the answer is yes.
* In the remake of ''ClashOfTheTitans'' Io constantly looks as though she's just come from a spa while the male characters look increasingly grimy. This, combined with her habit of just showing up without provisions even though she's following the same route as the others gives the impression that her [[CursedWithAwesome curse]] isn't immortality but the ability to ''teleport'', and she's just porting in from Argos whenever she's needed.
* In ''Film/TheEye'', Jessica Alba's character [[spoiler: is twice blinded by explosions, the first from a firecracker and the second from an exploding tanker sending windshield glass into her eye. Despite getting a face full of high-speed glass, at the end she has perfect skin.]]
* Averted in ''MaryShelleysFrankenstein''. [[spoiler: Elizabeth]] gets ''very ugly'' when [[spoiler: she is resurrected]].
* Played painfully straight in ''Film/XMenTheLastStand''. Halle Berry's Storm gets into some pretty rough fights scenes with Callisto, but never comes away with anything worse than tussled hair.
* Faux averted in DoomsDay, where the female lead [[spoiler: only had one eye. But she had a robot eye as well, and it was so lifelike it appears as though she's 100% unmaimed.]] This was used as the [[GadgetWatches Cool James Bond Device]] for the first fifteen minutes of the movie and then forgotten [[ChekhovsGun until the end]].
* In {{Versus}}, every single character with the exception of the female lead ends up literally coated in blood; and the male lead is implied to lose an eye (although it could be just stuck shut). More than that, her white shirt isn't stained in the least.
* In the 1958 film version of ''CatOnAHotTinRoof'', Maggie (ElizabethTaylor) goes out to the pouring rain and gets her hair soaking wet, but the next time we see her, it's perfectly dry and styled.
* Slightly subverted in the climactic shoot-out in ''Duel in the Sun'': although Pearl's ''face'' is untouched, her clothes and especially her hands are realistically torn and bloody after she crawls up a mountain on her hands and knees--possibly because actress Jennifer Jones really did injure herself in the process.
* Even though comic superheroes rarely receive scars, their movie counterparts are not so lucky. In ''Film/{{Daredevil}}'', Matt Murdock has many scars all over his body, although his face is left untouched. In the ''Film/TheDarkKnightSaga'', Bruce also has several scars along his back but again, his face is okay.
* ''Film/TheChroniclesOfNarnia: Film/PrinceCaspian'' gives us a RareMaleExample when the eponymous character hits his face on a tree branch in the opening escape sequence and gets up looking as handsome as ever with nary a scratch on him.
* In ''Film/AliceInWonderland'', Alice falls down a rabbit hole, gets shrunk, enlarged and stuffed in a teapot, then fights the Jabberwocky...all without a curl of hair getting out of place. She gets a scratch on her arm, but that's it.
* In the film version of ''Film/TheAvengers'', all of the male heroes go through the movie in various states of bodily damage, exhaustion, and fatigue. Black Widow, however, other than bleeding from her forehead and lip, suffers little visible damage. Keep in mind that this character is introduced in the film [[spoiler: being tortured by Russian terrorists]] and later spends a significant amount of time [[spoiler: fighting the Hulk and having a building fall on her.]]
** In a minor aversion, Maria Hill shows several injuries towards the end, including a rather nasty cut on her forehead.
* A deliberate aversion happens in ''SnowWhiteAndTheHuntsman''. The two titular characters come across a village inhabited only by women, all of whom intentionally scarred their own faces so they would be considered ugly in the eyes of Queen Ravenna, sparing them from being sacrificed to her life-stealing magic.
* Played straight for the first half of ''Film/SnowWhiteATaleofTerror''. Lilli is involved in a cave-in underground and is seen with dirt all over her after they get out, but is perfectly clean the next time we see her. It's implied she washes herself in the stream. Then at the end Claudia cuts her face with a pane of glass.
* ''{{Film/Terminator}}'' Sarah Connor's hair is immaculate at the end of the first film, despite having been at ground zero for two explosions, being chased all night by a Terminator, and all the other damage she suffered.
* Averted, momentarily in ''Film/GIJoeTheRiseOfCobra''. Scarlet takes a metal pan to the face, and it actually bruises her and leaves scratches, for one scene only. Next we see her, it's like she's had weeks of recovery, or very heavy makeup for a girl who has no interest in physical attraction.
** Averted again later after the train crash. The Baroness and Storm Shadow both have head wounds, and seem dazed. They are fully healed by the time they get back to their base, but they might have had high-tech first aid kits in their vehicle.
* In ''Film/StarTrekIntoDarkness'' Carol Marcus [[spoiler: gets fed a piece of the scenery by Khan when she gets in his way, and shortly afterwards has her leg stepped on by him, complete with sickening crunch. Cut to a shot of her being dragged to a teleporter and sickbay, and she has absolutely no external signs of injury.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* Inverted in Stephen R. Donaldson's two book series ''Mordant's Need''. Twice, a woman is wounded, and both times it's noted that the wound only ''enhances'' their otherwise shallow beauty.
* Averted in Stephen R. Donaldson's ''Gap Cycle'', however. Morn's beauty is destroyed, and she never gets it back completely.
* ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' is an exception in some ways: she's lost an eye and an arm, and had her facial nerves on one side paralyzed. In others, not so much; despite [[InformedDeformity mentions]] that the replacement facial nerves don't synch perfectly with the other side of her face, the prosthetics she uses to replace her missing parts are both cosmetically perfect ''and'' [[CursedWithAwesome far more versatile than her original parts]], and none of the problems detract from her [[CanonSue great beauty, personal charisma, or ridiculous willpower]].
* While Rachel of ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'' fame tends to get beaten up as badly as (if not worse than) the rest of the Animorphs crew in battle, everyone describes her as being the type of girl who could walk through a hurricane and still have perfect hair.
** Averted in #41: When a grown-up Jake encounters the future version of Rachel, she is severely crippled: One of her arms has been cut off, both her legs are missing, she's missing an eye and her face is grotesquely scarred.
** On a similar note, Cassie is the only character described as being able to make the sometimes horrific-looking process of morphing look beautiful and elegant.
** The Animorphs fight in animal forms, and the morphing process gets rid of injuries (sort of like a DNA-based factory reset... loosely speaking, since it can include clothes and covers changeable features like hairstyle). It really only counts if they get into a fight while human, and returning to human form doesn't always remove clotted blood. A WhatIf future revolves around Tom noticing Jake's...disheveled appearance and blowing his cover.
* SailorNothing is an exception: Himei pulls her top up to show Aki her scars and her battles with Yamiko leave her with injuries, as well as messing up her uniform.
* Averted ''twice'' with Suzie Shooter of the ''{{Nightside}}'' novels, who gets smacked on the cheek with a spiked mace in ''Paths Not Taken''. Half her face is destroyed, but the residue of werewolf blood still in her body from an earlier novel seems to be healing her ... until it runs out of power, leaving her face one-eyed and distorted by scar tissue. Later, John offers to find the means to restore her looks, but she tells him not to bother: as a bounty hunter, she's pleased with how the scars amp up her power to intimidate.
* In the first book of the ''Literature/InheritanceCycle'', there's Arya after she's been rescued; as Eragon notes while [[DudeShesLikeInAComa ogling her unconcious body]], a month of torture and imprisonment in a dirty dungeon apparently wasn't enough to dimish her constantly-reiterated hotness.
* In Creator/RobertEHoward's ConanTheBarbarian story "A Witch is Born" Tamaris
-->''Taramis was still beautiful, in spite of her rags and the imprisonment and abuse of seven weary months. ''
* Averted in the StarWarsExpandedUniverse with several female Jedi: Tenel Ka loses an arm when she makes a faulty lightsaber, Tahiri Veila receives permanent facial scarring after some Yhuuzan Vong Shapers experiment on her, and Alema Rar (who at one point prided herself excessively on appearance) loses a lekku, most of her foot, and all use of one arm.
* Averted with Princess Sisi from the ''Literature/WindOnFire'' trilogy, who is brutally scarred forever by Zohon for refusing to marry him. He draws his blade down one of her cheeks and then the other [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome when she turns it to him in defiance]]. This is the girl who was deemed to be so beautiful she was kept veiled at all times.
* An aversion takes place in ''RiversOfLondon'', when [[spoiler: Peter's sometime-partner Leslie gets possessed by Punch, which literally causes ''her face to fall off'' as soon as the malicious spirit leaves her body]]. As of book 3, months of plastic surgery have only corrected a fraction of the damage.
* Literature/TrappedOnDraconica: Rana lived in a desolate mountain cave for years yet she's still a knock-out beauty. [[JustifiedTrope However]], the narration notes that 'dust itself was afraid to touch it (her dress)'. Its possible she used her ShockAndAwe powers to create a DirtForcefield.
* After ''Literature/TheHungerGames'' Katniss finds that her hearing in her left ear is restored. Her skin's perfection, smooth and glowing with no burns, scars or anything. Peta on the other hand has his lower leg replaced with a metal and plastic device.
* {{Lampshaded}} in the second book of ''TheMortalInstruments'' when Alec, Jace, and Isabelle return from a hunt and Alec questions why Izzy never gets any dirt on her. Her response? "I'm pure at heart. It repels the dirt."
* Quite solidly averted in the StargateSG1 [[ExpandedUnivere tie-in novel]] ''The Barque of Heaven''. Sam is actually the first team member to get injured, and she winds up just as badly battered and completely exhausted as her male teammates.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* In {{Smallville}}, season four episode ''Delete'', Chloe shows absolutely no injury after she has been slammed head-first into walls multiple times, thrown down two flights of stairs and hit by a few of Lana's most vicious kicks, with at least one directly to the face. Oddly, despite Lana's TheChick status, she actually had blood on her face when it is over and she definitely isn't beaten as badly as Chloe.
** In ''Spirit'', the same thing happened, just worse. Clark [[spoiler:possessed by Dawn]] hits her with a SuperStrength punch also directly to the face that sends her flying into some metal canisters and she is completely unscathed. However, [[spoiler:Chloe is eventually revealed to have healing powers.]]
** In ''Persuasion'', Chloe and Tess had a brutal fight during which Tess grabs the front of Chloe's coat and punches her in the face repeatedly. Nope, nothing. Not to mention Tess tackled Chloe through a glass table and the latter smashes her with a glass bottle...
* ''Series/BirdsOfPrey'' [[HandWave hand waves]] this with makeup that works really well to cover up battle scars.
** Justified in-universe, in that (a) anyone with a secret identity ''needs'' to cover up scars they couldn't have gotten in their civilian persona, and (b) with the kind of money and technology that lies beyond a lot of DC heroes, it wouldn't be too hard to come up with makeup that good.
* ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' played straight for [[spoiler:Nikki. The woman gets caught in a burning building that ''explodes''. Yet at her funeral, she gets an open casket and]] doesn't have any burn marks at all.
** Claire's beauty is literally incapable of being tarnished. At least, [[GoodThingYouCanHeal not permanently]]. It's been said that Claire is this show's [[SaturdayNightLive Mr. Bill]].
** When exposed to nuclear radiation her skin is burned to the point that her skeleton is shown. And yet her hair remained intact.
* ''Series/StarTrekVoyager''. Despite the Doctor saying otherwise, Captain Janeway suffered some remarkably mild-looking fire injuries in the episode "Year of Hell" (even her [[RedHeadedHero famous red hair]] is intact). Ironic given the ResetButton conclusion (which meant that the producers didn't have to worry about long term effects) and that Voyager itself is [[TrashTheSet completely trashed]]. Incidentally, Seven of Nine's famous [[{{Stripperiffic}} catsuit]] was justified as a dermaplastic material to cover and heal the injuries from her Borgification. Must have taken her skin a long time to heal, as she [[MsFanservice never stopped wearing it]].
* In the season 4 [=DVDs=] of ''{{Lost}}'', Evangeline Lilly (Kate) laments that her character never gets to look beat up, no matter what damage she appears to take.
* In the UK science show ''{{Brainiac}}'', there are male and female test subjects (called 'Brainiacs') who are subject to experiments. You will find that for all of the experiments that subject a person to pain (such as electric shock), getting dirty, urinating, or just behaving in an uncivilized manner, female Brainiacs are never chosen. They usually take on the administrative roles and assess the males who perform these kinds of experiments.
** The female Brainiacs are used in the "Can You Do Your Job While Being Electrocuted?" stunt.
* [[LampshadeHanging Lampooned]] in YoungBlades when D'artagnan comes out of a fight without a scratch in ''Coat of Arms''.
* Surprisingly, several DisneyChannel and {{Nickelodeon}} shows aimed at young girls avert this by placing several of the female characters including the protagonists in slapstick situations [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKO0O7SNVZM here are a few examples]], it might be expectable because they are the same age as the target demographic
** Noticeable to some extent in the later seasons of Survivor. While both men and women show many of the expected effects of primitive living for a month, the men almost always have visible stubble and clearly grungy hair, while the women almost never have leg stubble and their hair often seems much cleaner.
* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' is a RareMaleExample. The two pretty boy leads, Sam and Dean, might get beaten up regularly but it's rare to see the effects last even until the end of the episode. Dean even says at one point that coming BackFromTheDead erased all his old scars and sorted out his broken fingers. Uh, we've seen your hands, sweetie, they had a lovely manicure.
** There's also a Season 3 episode where a young woman who has been in a coma since the age of eight appears to have spent the entire time lying peacefully in her hospital bed, with perfect hair and a full face of makeup.
** Averted with the season 5 finale. Dean is beaten till his eye is swollen shut and the rest of his face is a bloody pulp. It isn't long before Castiel fixes him up, though.
* Actually a plot point in ''Series/TheTwilightZone'' (2002 series) episode "Eye of the Beholder".
* The classic Polish series ''Czterej pancerni i pies'' had a precise rule about this. All the male characters would get dirty and greasy but all the female characters would always be shown with no dirt and clean clothes even though they were supposedly experiencing the same wartime conditions as the men. This was done very deliberately to soften the impact of a WorldWarII series on a viewing public that lived through the war.
* {{Lampshaded}} on ''BreakingIn'', when, after being caught in a very strong security system, all of the male members of the team sustained bruises or some other sort of minor injury (including one getting his eyebrows burned off), and Melanie does not. She gets called out on it, with people wondering why she doesn't seem to have a scratch on her.
* Averted in ''BoardwalkEmpire''. Richard Harrow was once a very handsome man until a war injury destroyed much of the skin around his mouth and taking out an eye. Pearl, the stripper, also has an extremely nasty scar across her face from a knife attack and Chalky has a very noticeable facial scar.
* Occasionally averted in ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer''. Although Buffy usually looks styled and done up with perfect hair while slaying vampires, there have been times when Buffy has looked bruised and battered. Most notable is a large cut and bruise spanning much of her forehead that lasted several episodes in Season 4.
* Played with on ''{{Chuck}}''. Sarah frequently gets into fights with that episode's bad guy or mooks. Usually she comes off without a scratch despite often taking several good hits. Other times she's had bruises and split lips. Some notorious fights (the high school reunion and car fights in Season 2 and Season 4's catwalk fight) ended with her face rather battered and bloody. Nonetheless, by the next episode her face is back in perfect condition (one wonders how no one ever seems to notice). Chuck himself has been in several fights from Season 3 forward, but never shows a sign of having been hit. Casey has sustained several visible injuries over the course of the series, but they seldom carry over into subsequent episodes. Most notoriously, after being shot in the leg in Season Three and needing emergency surgery performed, in the episode set the ''very next day'' he shows no sign that he was ever wounded (the same situation was averted in Season 4, where he was wheelchair-bound the episode after being shot in the leg again).
* While Samantha Carter of ''Series/StargateSG1'' does get plenty beaten and bruised over the course of the show ("Death Knell" is a particularly brutal example), but the creators of the show do invoke this trope in the commentary of "Off the Grid" when the camera pans across [=SG1=] revealing three severely bruised and bleeding guys...and one beautiful blond woman (though she did have a bit of a bruise on her face at the time.)
* An episode of ''Series/TheATeam'' ("The Bend in the River") had the team hiking, camping, and fighting in the jungle for several days. The guys were sweaty, rumpled, and grungy, but their resident girl looked utterly perfect at all times, to the extent of her white shirt and pale slacks remaining spotless while she was kneeling in a hole digging for ancient artifacts.
* Seems to be regularly averted on the reimagined ''Series/HawaiiFive0''. Whenever Kono gets hit in the face, she is shown bruised.
* ''Series/GilligansIsland'' wasn't ''supposed'' to be realistic, but it is a good example. Despite being marooned on an island, Ginger always had great hair and her makeup never seemed to run; Mary-Ann always looked rather decent too. In fact, the whole cast were able to maintain impeccable hygene, and their clothes never wore out.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop RPG]]
* ''Tales from the Floating Vagabond'' had this as a trainable skill for either gender: 'Look Good at All Times'.
* The "No Visible Damage" perk from ''{{GURPS}}: Supers''.
* Averted in ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'', with the [[AmazonBrigade Sisters of Battle]]. They look about what you'd expect badass elite soldiers to look like in real life, regardless of gender. That is, bald (short hair at best) and covered in scars.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* Chun-Li's defeat portrait in StreetFighter 2 is pretty tame compared to the other character's portraits -- her {{Odango}} are messed up and she's tearful, but that's mostly it. Cammy too -- she just looks out of breath. The men, however, are bruised, swollen and bloody.
** ''StreetFighter 3'' is even more extreme, and some of the males look completely ''destroyed'' in the defeated portriats -- especially Dudley and Ken who look ''fucked''. The girls are much less damaged however -- Elena ''does'' have a black eye, but Ibuki just looks a bit roughed-up and tearful.
** In StreetFighter 4, several of the Ultra Combo cutscenes cause cartoonishly exaggerated reactions to getting hit, but only to the male characters.
* All of the male characters in SamuraiShodown 3 can be bloodily cut in pieces even the cute kid. But all of the female characters are immune.
* While MetalSlug generally averts this, the third game has a rather blatant example with the death animation when the player character gets hit by a acidic slime. The male characters are StrippedToThebone and the female characters suffer clothing damage.
* ''Franchise/MassEffect'': The PC is customizable, and one can give their character scars for either gender. However, males can get real disfiguring scars, but women are limited to small scratches.
** In the second game, both genders get a set of scars that become more prominent the higher Shepard's [[KarmaMeter Renegade]] stat gets.
** Completely averted with Cerberus troops in ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'': The AlwaysFemale [[PsychicPowers Phantoms]] and [[ColdSniper Nemeses]] enemies are capable of dying just as messily as the other Cerberus units that wear [[AmbiguousGender Feature Concealing]] armor, though it helps that all of them are FacelessGoons.
** Strangely, in the first game the default female design had a more noticeable scar than the male design, including an additional one near her lip. Both of these are gone in the second game, while the default male scar remains.
** First averted but ultimately played straight in ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'' with Ashley, whose face is bloody and bruised all over after [[spoiler:being beaten up by Dr. Eva]], but once she gets out of the hospital, she looks just the same as before that. Possibly justified due to advanced future medicine.
* Present and averted in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins''; male party members get covered in [[LudicrousGibs ridiculous amounts of]] [[{{Gorn}} blood spatters]], but [[JeanneDArchetype Leliana]], [[HotWitch Morrigan]], and [[CoolOldLady Wynne]] come away perfectly clean, however the Warden gets pretty messy regardless of gender. Justified in that this has more to do with combat class than gender, every close-combat fighter gets sprinkled with blood, while all the female companions are archers or mages.
* A more extreme example is in the web game ''VideoGame/NanacaCrash'', all the male characters take heavy abuse in the game, while all of the females remain untouched and instead heap abuse on the male characters. Not surprising considering it's [[VisualNovel/CrossChannel based off an H-game]].
* Seen somewhat in ''KnightsOfTheOldRepublic'', near the end of the game, when [[spoiler:Bastila goes over to the Dark Side. For everyone else, including your character, the result of drastic drops into the Dark Side is progressive disfigurement. Bastila remains as good looking as ever.]]
* YoJinBo allows main characters of [[BulletProofFashionPlate both genders]] to avoid so much as a scratch in art. Despite running from ninjas through a forest, Sayori doesn't ever rip her kimono or get sweaty or anything. In fact, after the [[HotSpringsEpisode hot spring]], Jin even comments on how lovely girls smell after they get out of the bath...despite the fact that her clothes were not washed and thus should ''stink''. She does break a sandal strap once, but that's only [[BridalCarry so Bo could carry her]]. And even when the guys are said to be injured in text, it only rarely shows up as bloodspatter in the art.
* Played straight in the DefJamSeries, where the women can engage in no holds barred brawls just as brutal as any of the male characters, and yet, not a speck of blood or a bloodied nose results from it.
* [[Franchise/TombRaider Lara Croft]] can die in fashions most people would see in a Mature rated game, but the worst that comes out of it is blood loss, if any.
** Averted in the [[VideoGame/TombRaider2013 2013 reboot]]. Right out of the gate Lara is a filthy mess and generally stays that way. At times her skin gets a bit cleaned up, but her clothes remain disheveled, dirty and bloody, and the rest of her gets bloodied (often her own) or dirtied up again in pretty short order. And when the player first takes control of her she's [[spoiler: hurt and struggling to walk after [[ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice falling on a piece of rebar]]]].
*** Amusingly she still retains a perfect hair throughout the game. Not-so-coincidentally AMD developed a completely new engine for rendering hair for this game, and probably didn't want their hard work look too messy.
* VideoGame/DeadSpace2. [[spoiler: Ellie's eye gets poked out by Stross. You don't actually see this, but you do later see Stross standing there with an eyeball on the end of his screwdriver. Ellie is still alive and very much kicking ("You owe me an eye you bastard!"). Normally, this would be bad enough to cause a very specific (look in description) aversion, but later on you as the player are asked to guide a needle into Isaac's eye. If you miss and fail, instead of carefully going into his eyeball (disturbing enough in and of itself), the entire needle and the machine behind it gets jammed into his eye and sprays blood everywhere, in full and close up view of the player. ]]
* Sylvanas Windrunner from the ''{{Warcraft}}'' series. Once a beautiful High Elf, she put up a heroic LastStand against [[VillainProtagonist Arthas]] when he invaded Quel'Thalas. Arthas rewarded her for her trouble by having her brutally tortured, then killing her and turning her into a banshee. Her corpse was left to rot for what was presumably an extended period of time before banshee Sylvanas eventually broke free of Arthas' grasp and possessed it. Despite all this, she's still depicted as beautiful in ''WorldOfWarcraft'', in an EvilIsSexy sort of way. [[UndeathlyPallor Her skin is now blue]] and her [[RedEyesTakeWarning eyes red]], but there's no visible scarring or decomposition.
** Death Knights are similair, the time between your character's death and revival is left unstated, but you're not terribly decomposed unless you choose one of the three skins made specifically with rot in mind.

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
* Wade Barrett (a handsome dude in his own right), no matter the abuse he suffers, his hair will always remain in perfect condition.
* In WWE the act of blading (cutting yourself during a match to bleed) is now banned so none of the wrestlers will show any disfiguring injuries to their face.
* In general the WWE Divas tend to remain perfectly clean with styled hair and no visible injuries though there have been a lot of aversions. TrishStratus and Victoria had a fairly physical feud involving a lot of hardcore matches where both of them bled quite a bit. {{Lita}} also got accidentally cut above the eye during a match and bled really heavily - she and her opponent were praised for it. KellyKelly also gave BethPhoenix a bloody nose once. Melina Perez claims to have gotten a bloody lip in a match with Michelle [=McCool=] but it didn't show up on camera.
** Behind the scenes, the WWE Divas are going in both directions at the same time, strangely enough. Former Diva Maria once said that the higher-ups apparently believe that looks are their greatest asset, and a girl will be taken off TV for a couple of weeks if she's look excessively bruised or beaten up. The Divas themselves, however, are desperate to try and shake their "model" reputation (of being pretty but untalented,) and as the WWE becomes more social and the Divas have a more direct link to their fanbase, they'll frequently post photos of their war wounds, to show the fans they're just as tough as anyone, as Beth Phoenix did when she posted a photo of a pretty nasty welt on her face (and subsequent black eye) after a botched move from Alicia Fox.
* Roxxi in TNA is probably the ultimate aversion. Her gimmick was the "Hardcore Knockout" and she bled a lot.
* Played with in TNA when they had a women's First Blood match but at the end there was only a small trickle of blood.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]
* WebVideo/TheNostalgiaCritic is a RareMaleExample PlayedForLaughs. No matter how many beatings, suicides or shots to the head, a few seconds later he'll be clean and pretty again.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* In ''{{Futurama}}'', Amy is treated the same as the other characters. However, the DVD commentary of the YouMeanXMas Episode, it is said that this was done deliberately to ''test'' whether people would laugh at a woman being hurt in amusing ways.
* ''KimPossible'', and everyone else, never look affected by the action for more than a few moments. Even after she fights Shego in a mudbath, the mud is gone a few seconds later. Dr. Drakken manages to burn his hair off with a few experiments, but that quickly comes back too. Probably the only exception is the occasional GlamourFailure from a defeated villain.
* Averted in the second episode of ScoobyDooMysteryInc. Daphne discovers that the Alligator Skin products are imitation by wrapping a belt around her forearm, causing her "allergy of all synthetic animal skins" to kick in, leaving her with very nasty red pustules along her arm. Granted, she covers them with her sleeve, but we're still given a very good long look at them.
* ''MyLittlePony and Friends'' episode "The Glass Princess" sees three of the ponies [[ImportantHaircut get shaved bald]]. It grows back instantly, with a HandWave about it being magical.
** In ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'', Rarity cuts off her own tail at one point, reassuring the others that it will grow back. It gets restored by the end of that episode via a different HandWave, when [[spoiler: Rarity gains the reawakened Element of Harmony, Generosity]].
* Korra in ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'' gets kidnapped one episode, and in the process gets several cuts and bruises. They stay for the episode after, but disappear the next episode. It's justified by the fact that she has HealingHands that need water to work, and until she got loose she had no access to water.
[[/folder]]

!!Examples and exceptions of the second (gross-out oriented) kind:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Advertising]]
* [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z7aN2AopyZc This ad]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Anime and Manga ]]
* Averted in ''Anime/PantyAndStockingWithGarterbelt''. Panty gets covered from head to toe in poop in the very first episode.
* Averted in ''Manga/ChronoCrusade''. Satella and Azmaria are forced to search through a sewer and emerge... not very clean.
* Averted in the manga of ''Manga/LoveHina'' in which Naru gets diarrhea.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Comic Books ]]
* Belgian comic ''{{Violine}}'' has all manner of terrible things happen to everyone, including [[KidHero 10-year-old protagonist]] Violine. She gets muddy, she gets cut and bleeds, and she even pukes (visibly, not just a "behind the character" view). It's a rather darkly humorous adventure.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film]]
* You barely need to watch ''{{Bridesmaids}}'' for twenty minutes before you get a faceful of this trope being averted.
* The exceedingly raunchy and disgusting game of Battleshits in ''Film/HaroldAndKumarGoToWhiteCastle'' Although the two ladies were physically very hot, their little game ruined the appeal immensely.
* Though it doesn't occur in the movie proper, after the end credits of ''AKnightsTale'', the supporting protagonists are shown engaging in a flatulence contest--which the woman wins. Of course, Kate's a blacksmith and not your traditional woman by any stretch of the imagination.
* ''LawnDogs''. Devon burps on purpose in response to Trent's burping, and also shows off her large nasty chest scar from surgery. In fact, she's quite a morbid kid overall.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* ''Literature/CousinBette'': [[spoiler:Valerie Marneffe's]] CruelAndUnusualDeath is a memorable aversion.
* Creator/JonathanSwift wrote an entire [[http://plagiarist.com/poetry/8049/ poem]] about a man's horror at discovering that women have gross bodily functions too.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* ''Series/MaidMarianAndHerMerryMen'' is a very good example. The show featured a considerable amount of slapstick (mostly mess), though almost no actual violence, but Maid Marian herself is practically never a victim, even when all of the rest of her band are. Admittedly Rose once got paint poured over her, but then Rose is a villain. (The trope seems to apply slightly less strongly to female villains.)
* German kids' series ''DiePfefferkorner'', which centers around a group of kid detectives, tends to treat their interrogated captives differently by gender. Boys are tied up and subjected to silly tortures, like being tickled, forced to smell old socks, or strapped to a rotating wheel. Girls, on the other hand, are just tied up and left alone.
* Body odour and/or halitosis in general seems to be something of an exception as it makes a point [[TakeOurWordForIt without detracting from the actresses physical beauty.]] Carla from ''{{Scrubs}}'' was told off in one episode for her bad breath after her regular hummus breaks, while over on ''TheOC'' Summer Roberts became a student activist, and gave up bathing for a while. She didn't ''look'' dirty, but the other characters certainly commented on the smell. Also she stopped shaving her legs, but, slightly conveniently, we didn't see the results.
** Likewise, Kimmy from ''FullHouse'' is said to have feet that smell, which is played up for humor. But since we can only see and not smell Kimmy, we have to [[TakeOurWordForIt take their word for it]], since she is not ugly or anything.
** Lily Truscott from ''HannahMontana'' is also said to have smelly feet, by Hannah/Miley herself.
* The show ''RadGirls''. Ever wanted to see ''Series/{{Jackass}}'' with a female cast? They do some really nasty stuff, like the "pissing, shitting and puking contest" in the back of a moving van.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* VideoGame/MortalKombat averts this trope, as the female fighters can [[LudicrousGibs explode into tiny bits,]] [[HighPressureBlood bleed pints from the simplest punch to the face,]] and [[MadeOfPlasticine lose limbs]] just as easily as a male fighter can.
** VideoGame/MortalKombat9 specifically averts this trope, not only in fatalities, but the effects of combat. Not even Kitana's fans can hide all the bloody scars and black eyes.
* The Metroid series plays this straight most of the time, considering all the abuse Samus goes through, heck, Fusion, Super, and Zero Mission use their game over screens as Fetish Fuel! It's grusomely averted in MetroidPrime 3 however. You can see Samus's face deteriorate over time due to Phazon poisoniong, and at one point she vomits up Phazon.
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[[folder:Web Comics]]
* Averted in ''DominicDeegan: Oracle for Hire'', in which Dejah's ''Slime Geyser'' teleport magic has the side effect of always leaving one person in the transported party covered in slime. That person is ''always'' Luna. It's been explained as Dejah disliking Luna due to her foot-in-mouth syndrome.
* In an ''[[Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick Order of the Stick]]'' strip, Haley and Celia ''both'' get puked on. Celia even had her mouth open a little bit...
* Avoided with regards to Jodie in ''Webcomic/{{Loserz}}''. One comic depicts Ben's mother saying how nice it is to have Jodie as a female influence. Cut to a shot of the two boys recoiling in disgust from Jodie, who's just farted. The boys complain loudly, and Jodie derides them as weak and unmanly.
-->'''Ben:''' Yeah, she's a delicate flower.
* ''LastRes0rt'' avoids this trope and heaps on the gore pretty even-handedly, lady-players included. So far, Addy's been shot at least once through the chest, Daisy's playing on an amputated leg, Jigsaw hulks out into her zombie-esque SuperpoweredEvilSide roughly once an episode (after being shot and getting cut up a bit), Cypress dove head-first into a pool of rapidly-dissolving nanotech compared to stomach acid... and then, well... [[http://www.lastres0rt.com/2011/01/lets-play-ragging-on-the-man-with-the-gun/ this.]] The boys get beat up too, but there's only so many of them...
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[[folder:Western Animation]]
* An example is used in the first episode of ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'', it's particularly blatant when Appa sneezes toward [[ButtMonkey Sokka]] and Katara and almost magically only one winds up covered in green goo. Guess which.
** Of course, when [[DishingOutDirt Toph]] joined the cast, that ceased to be an issue - within two episodes she made a joke about having hairy armpits, and there was another gag about her picking her toes. She proceeds to spend most of the series cheerfully coated in filth.
** It's most notably averted in "The Drill" episode, where the only female character who ''doesn't'' end up liberally caked with mud is one who very deliberately stayed away from it. This aversion is particularly noticeable because [[MagnificentBitch Azula]] and [[MsFanservice Ty Lee]] are exactly the sort of characters who might be expected to look implausibly perfect regardless of circumstances.
* The SequelSeries TheLegendOfKorra has the titular female character enjoying (and winning) a burping contest with a male friend...in a restaurant full of people who are aghast at both of them.
* In ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans'', the first appearance of Terra depicts her as being ''extremely'' dirty, when we see her emerging from the shower and leaving a bathtub full of dirt and grime. Of course, we never actually see her ''covered'' in this dirt and grime before the shower, so again, we have to [[TakeOurWordForIt take their word for it]]. Though she and Raven did get [[CoveredInGunge drenched with Mud]] later on.
* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark''.
** "Eat, Pray, Queef". Guess what it involves. Hint: not much eating and no real prayer.
** During Wendy and Cartman's fight, even though she treated him to a NoHoldsBarredBeatdown, he [[WouldHitAGirl got in a few good punches at the beginning,]] and the most that ever happens to her is that she got little dizzy. She comes out of the thing with not a scratch on her, while Cartman probably had half the bones in his face broken. {{Justified|Trope}} as Cartman is a DirtyCoward who cannot take a hit and [[LaserGuidedKarma totally had it coming]].
* Lil in ''{{Rugrats}}'' was just as gross and filthy as her twin Phil. However in the spin-off ''AllGrownUp'' she attempts to be a girly-girl but doesn't quite get there. She farts in one episode and repeatedly denies it.
* Averted in ''WesternAnimation/TotalDramaIsland''. The girls get involved in the disgusting ToiletHumour as the guys do. Among other thing, Lindsay is shown [[VomitIndiscretionShot vomiting]].
* Averted in ''WesternAnimation/{{Sixteen}}'', often with Caitlyn. Plus, one episode involves Nikki clogging the toilet.
* During one episode of ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls'', Buttercup winds up covered head-to-toe in assorted waste, and everything refuses to associate with her until she bathes. [[EveryoneHasStandards This includes the monsters!]]
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